Niger Delta
Controversy Trails $1bn Ogoni Clean-Up Project
A leading international advocacy organisation on environment, Environmental Rights Action (Friends of the Earth), has faulted the ongoing $1billion Ogoni clean-up exercise in the Niger Delta.
It said the lack on seriousness on the part of the government was a major threat to its completion.
The Executive Director of the organisation, Godwin Uyi Ojo, while briefing newsmen, yesterday, said the agency of government handling the project, Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project (HYPREP), was yet to define clear parameters on how it intends to execute the project, despite the availability of over $100million at its disposal.
Ojo called on the National Assembly to step in by directing its relevant committees to provide oversight functions on the clean-up.
He said proper oversight function by the National Assembly will prevent the dissipation of public revenue and stop the eventual failure of the project which was flagged off by the Vice President, Prof Yemi Osinbajo.
He said: “The National Assembly should urgently intervene in the Ogoni clean-up process by directing appropriate committees to provide oversight functions on the clean-up process.
“In particular, unqualified contractors were procured for the clean up, and lacking a robust Key Performance Indicators to measure the quality of remediation.
“National Assembly oversight function will prevent the dissipation of public revenue and at this early stage and halt the drift of HYPREP towards the fate of similar laudable interventions in the Niger Delta that went into private pockets instead of addressing the needs of the people and the environment.
“The National Assembly should adopt the HYPREP.